Unmarried Adolescents’ Experiences of Using Reproductive and Maternal Health Services in Nigeria and Uganda: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Site/Settings
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Sampling Strategy and Size
2.4. Recruitment Strategy
2.5. Data Collection
2.6. Data Analysis
3. Ethical Considerations
4. Findings
4.1. Characteristics of Participants
4.2. Accessibility of Services
“If you go to private clinics, the medical personnel are kind-hearted, dedicated and if you explain things to them, they will understand. They will attend to you but not so in public clinics”.(FGD female 10–14)
Because this place is open and young girls don’t like it. For example, if I am coming to the clinic, many people will see me when I am entering. There is no privacy and there is a need to have another entrance that is not too exposed.(FGD, Female 15–19)
“Let me tell you madam nurse what happened to me. On Wednesday, I went to Kibaale hospital and there was no attendant at the facility. Even if you found someone there, they just get your book and write in it the prescription you need, and they will tell you to go to a clinic and buy the medicine. That is what happens. The health workers should at least be available in the hospitals, we do not know if these health workers are not enough, or they are always absent at work.”(FGD, female 15–19)
“I would go without anything to eat, if I couldn’t afford transport how could I get what to eat? Sometimes we didn’t have what to eat, we would eat supper and there is no breakfast and besides, I would be running late. I would go hungry and then they wait for others who come at 11 and then you go and line up.”(IDI participant)
4.3. Acceptability of Services
“The nurses are very rude, harsh and not polite. They talk to you rudely at the clinics. I will not go to that place because of the way they talk. They will talk and use aggressive words on you”.(FGDs, Female aged 15–19)
“They will ask you, who is your dad? We will call him and tell him what you are doing here. They will tell you that you are too small for this. Go and come with your parents, and because they (girls) don’t want to come with their parents, so they would rather go to a private hospital not minding the cost and risk”.(FGDs aged 10–14)
“Some midwives are very rude and abusive. Abusing us became a song at the health center. They (health providers) will abuse you; you can even think they are drunk just to abuse you.”(IDI Participant)
“The health workers treat us harshly. Sometimes you go to the health center dressed in a skirt and a blouse because you don’t have a maternity dress, so the midwife insults you for that. Maybe you don’t have a cloth to lay on the bed and a birth mat, so they can’t treat you. The midwife tells you that if you are poor why did you get pregnant? Or she does not attend to you and tells you to first get the requirements.”(FGD aged 15–19)
“I was pleased because the doctor treated me very well and it has even given me the morale to go back all the time for check-ups. Even when am going for my check-ups, I feel eager to go and meet him (health provider).”(IDI Participant)
“Of recent, they brought a male midwife who is better, but when you find the lady!!!”.(FGD participant)
4.4. Appropriateness of Services Received
“In public hospitals, they do not provide the service you want them to provide for you. They will tell you to go and come back the next day”.(FGD, Female In-aged 10–14)
The medical personnels are always in a hurry. They don’t even give you attention. They will just talk to you in two sentences and that’s all.(FGD female aged 10–14)
“There are times when they give me medicine after writing on it, but sometimes, the lady just tells you that she has no time if it is like the iron tablets. Some information was missing, like feeding well and how to breastfeed the baby, the foods to start the baby with, they didn’t teach us all that. I got to know them recently when the time had already passed.”(IDI participant)
4.5. Equitability of Services Received
“Imagine! Someone like me going to ask for a condom in the Primary Healthcare centre, the nurses will make jess [ridicule] of you. For example, someone will ask you that what do you need a condom for at your age? Go away from my face. Sometimes they do not pay attention to you as a young person.”(FGD aged 10–14)
In your face, they will tell you that they won’t do it for you, you are too small for abortion services and you are not yet married. Go and come with your parents.(FGDs Female aged 15–19)
“You become so worried, which makes you even deliver an unhealthy baby. They attend to you while giving birth when you are all so worried and sometimes you tell them but they just look at you and ignore you and yet you are in pain, all in the name of not sending you there”.(FGDs participant)
“The services are not good because they don’t treat you well because you don’t have a husband, yet you are pregnant. Those who come with their husbands are given priority and for you who even came early, you end up leaving the facility late.”(FGD participant)
“These issues of ‘the person who impregnated me is not around’, nurses don’t want to hear that. So, for a single mother you don’t waste time going to the hospital because you don’t have a husband.”(FGD participant)
4.6. Effectiveness of Services Received
In public hospitals, their condom stays longer. It is not good. Some of them keep it for more than six months. The quality is not there, especially in health centres. They will continue to give out the condom even when is no longer good.(FGD Female aged 15–19)
“For me I was of a view that the government should help us and give us enough medicine. You know there are times when you go to the hospital like for antenatal care, or you go to the hospital when you are pregnant, and you find when the medicine is not enough and so they write for you medicine for you to buy and yet you do not have money, so you end up missing the dose.”(FGD five participant)
“You left home, you’re in pain, you are tired, you have put in your own transport only to reach the health centre and you are told there’s no medicine, at times you have no money with you. You came running to hospital for help, you are in pain but that’s what you get. Now what someone decides is not to go there completely but rather go to the clinic and buy her tablets.”(FGD participant)
5. Discussion
6. Strengths and Limitations of the Study
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Assessment Criteria | Definition |
---|---|
Accessible | Adolescents are able to obtain the services that are provided |
Acceptable | Health services are provided in ways that meet the expectations of adolescent clients |
Appropriate | The health services that adolescents need are provided |
Equitable | All adolescents, not just certain groups, are able to obtain the health services they need |
Effective | The right health services are provided in the right way and make a positive contribution to the health of adolescents. |
No of FGDs | No of Participants per Group | Age Range | Used SRH Services | Health Facility Visited | Attending School | Education-Levels | Place of Residence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 9 | 10–14 | Yes | Public | In-School | 2 Primary and 7 secondary | Urban |
B | 10 | 10–14 | Yes | Private | In-School | 1 primary and 9 secondary | Urban |
C | 10 | 10–14 | Yes | Mixed | Out-of-School | 8 primary and 2 secondary | Rural |
D | 9 | 10–14 | Yes | Private | Out-of-School | 6 primary and 3 secondary | Urban |
E | 8 | 15–19 | Yes | Public | In-school | 7 secondary and 1 University | Urban |
F | 9 | 15–19 | Yes | Mixed | In-school | 6 Secondary and 3 university | Rural |
G | 10 | 15–19 | Yes | Public | Out-of-school | All secondary | Rural |
H | 10 | 15–19 | Yes | Mixed | Out-of-school | 2 primary and 8 secondary | Both |
No. of FGDs | No of Participants per Group | Age Range | Pregnant at Time of FGDs | Age at First Birth | ANC Use | Place of Delivery | PNC | Education-Levels | Place of Residence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 8 | 16–18 | One participant | Missing | Yes | HF | No PNC | 2 primary and 5 secondary | Urban |
B | 5 | 18–19 | One participant | Missing | Yes | HF | No PNC | All secondary | Rural |
C | 5 | 18–19 | One participant | Missing | HF | No PNC | 2 primary and 3 secondary | Rural | |
D | 4 | 16–18 | No | 14–16 | Yes | HF | 2 had PNC | 2 primary and 2 secondary | Urban |
E | 5 | 17–19 | No | 16–17 | Yes | HF | 2 had PNC | 3 primary and 3 secondary | Urban |
F | 4 | 16–17 | No | 15–16 | One had no ANC | One at home | Missing | Missing | Rural |
G | 6 | 16–19 | One participant | 15–17 | Yes | HF | 1 had PNC | 2 primary and 4 secondary | Rural |
H | 5 | 18–19 | No | 14–19 | 2 at home | 2 had PNC | 3 primary, and 2 secondary | Rural |
Participant | Age | Pregnant at Time of Interview | Age at First Birth | Pregnancy Wanted | ANC Use | No of ANC Visits | HF Delivery | PNC | Education Level | In School at Pregnancy | Place of Residence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 16 | No | 16 | No | No | 0 | HF | No | Primary | No | Rural |
2 | 17 | Yes | N/a | Yes | Yes | 1 | N/a | N/a | Primary | Yes | Rural |
3 | 17 | No | 16 | No | yes | 3 | Home | No | Primary | Yes | Rural |
4 | 17 | No | 16 | No | Yes | Nil | HF | No | primary | Yes | Rural |
5 | 17 | Yes | N/a | No | Yes | Nil | N/a | N/a | Primary | No | Rural |
6 | 18 | No | 17 | No | Yes | 3 | HF | No | Secondary | Yes | Urban |
7 | 18 | No | 17 | No | Yes | 2 | TBA | No | No Education | No | Rural |
8 | 17 | No | 17 | No | Yes | 4 | HF | No | Primary | No | Rural |
9 | 19 | No | 18 | Yes | Yes | 2 | HF | No | Secondary | Yes | Rural |
10 | 16 | No | 14 | No | Yes | 3 | HF | No | Secondary | Yes | Urban |
11 | 19 | Yes | N/a | Yes | Yes | 3 | N/a | N/a | Missing | No | Rural |
12 | 17 | Yes | N/a | No | Yes | 1 | N/a | N/a | Secondary | Yes | Rural |
13 | 19 | No | 17 | No | Yes | 3 | HF | No | Primary | No | Rural |
14 | 15 | Yes | 14 | No | Yes | 4 | HF | N/a | Primary | Yes | Rural |
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Onukwugha, F.; Agaba, P.; Hayter, M.; Orton, B. Unmarried Adolescents’ Experiences of Using Reproductive and Maternal Health Services in Nigeria and Uganda: A Qualitative Study. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 203. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050203
Onukwugha F, Agaba P, Hayter M, Orton B. Unmarried Adolescents’ Experiences of Using Reproductive and Maternal Health Services in Nigeria and Uganda: A Qualitative Study. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(5):203. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050203
Chicago/Turabian StyleOnukwugha, Franklin, Peninah Agaba, Mark Hayter, and Bev Orton. 2022. "Unmarried Adolescents’ Experiences of Using Reproductive and Maternal Health Services in Nigeria and Uganda: A Qualitative Study" Social Sciences 11, no. 5: 203. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050203
APA StyleOnukwugha, F., Agaba, P., Hayter, M., & Orton, B. (2022). Unmarried Adolescents’ Experiences of Using Reproductive and Maternal Health Services in Nigeria and Uganda: A Qualitative Study. Social Sciences, 11(5), 203. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050203